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Daily Loaf

Your daily source for the best in blog.


Theater: It’s not like television – We can hear you

Posted by amisalleecorley on Oct. 27, 2009, at 3:00 pm

Christopher Rutherford and Glenn Gover deserving a great audience

Christopher Rutherford and Glenn Gover deserving a great audience

Why does one come to the theater if one does not want to watch the play? Case in point: The Woman in Black sold out performance last night. I directed the show and have been to just about every performance, so I tend to watch the audience as well as the play.  It is a thriller with many technical aspects that all need to be spot-on every night, so I watch how it is all played out and how it is all received by the audience.  So, Sunday night being a sold out show, I lingered on the sidelines so that those who paid for a ticket got a seat. I had the perfect view and it was the perfect audience. Almost.

Perhaps I should explain “perfect audience.”  Have you ever been an observer of art with a whole room full of strangers with whom you collectively took the journey with the artist — as one?  Ever been at a performance where you needed to see that exact thing at that exact time in your life?  Ever been inspired collectively with the person sitting next to you, without talking to each other?  It is not a type of audience, per se, but rather the right combination for the particular experience at hand.

Conversely, as a performer or fellow audience member sitting in your vicinity, if you’ve had a bad day at work and can’t shake it off, we feel it.  If you had too much to drink at happy hour before you got to the theater, we feel it.  If you are waiting for that voice mail or text message and want intermission to get here so you can check it, we feel it.  Or, in the case of last night’s performance, if you did not come to the theater to watch a play, we feel it.

Sunday’s play was 98 percent the perfect audience.  Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: Ami Sallee Corley, audience etiquette, Brandon Windish, Christopher Rutherford, Chuck Windish, Glenn Gover, Gorilla Theatre, Jobsite Theater, Keith Arsenault, night of the living dead, The Woman in Black
Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Backstage Tampa Bay |



Theater Review: Spine-tingling The Woman in Black at Gorilla Theatre

Posted by Mark E. Leib on Oct. 16, 2009, at 12:22 pm

WIB press 1

Christopher Rutherford (Nicole Jeannine Smith photo)

The Woman in Black is an entertaining, unusually literary ghost drama for the Halloween season, though one that lacks much reason for existing outside its capacity to excite a degree of fear. Beautifully acted by Christopher Rutherford and Glenn Gover, the current Gorilla Theatre production is genuinely spooky — several times spectators shrieked — and pleasingly original. It won’t remind you of anything else you’ve seen.

It features wonderfully discomfiting sound effects, super-serious characters (to raise the level of terror), and a ghost of dreadful countenance with nothing the least bit friendly about her. Skillfully directed by Ami Sallee Corley, Woman has everything but substance — some perspective on reality that might remain with us after the final curtain falls.

I suppose it’s wrong to want more than chills and thrills from a Halloween play, but this drama is so consistently intelligent, a little authentic significance would hardly be out of place. Oh, well. If you’re looking for a spine-tingler more intellectual than ZooBoo, this is your poison. It’s about as nerve-wracking as these things get, and so gore-free that you can bring the (older) kids. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: Ami Sallee Corley, Christopher Rutherford, ghost story, Glenn Gover, Gorilla Theatre, Halloween, Thriller, woman in black
Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Theater |



Doin’ it for yourself: Jails, Hospitals and Hip-hop at Jobsite

Posted by amisalleecorley on Aug. 18, 2009, at 10:22 am

As a freelance artist I find myself in a lull of productivity sometimes.  In the springtime I tend to do a lot of administrative work for the Access Arts Scholarship program for the Patel Conservatory, so my artistic side isn’t being shopped out to other companies as much (i.e. I don’t audition for shows during that time.)

In these times I always think I am going to dust off that script of the one-woman show I’ve always wanted to work on.  Problem is, when you do a one-person project it seems like you have to do all the work for yourself; be your own motivator, be responsible to only yourself.  It’s hard to pull through on the deliverables when it is only you that you have to answer to.

Well, local actor Curtis Belz found the gumption, self-motivation, and two friends (eventually more), to pull off Danny Hoch’s (pictured) Jails, Hospitals and Hip-hop, a one-man show demanding that he play several personas, including Flip, a good ol’ boy from the Midwest who has come to identify with urban hip-hoppers; Bronx, a sidewalk vendor who gets pinched for selling without a license; and Sam, a prison guard with an anger management problem — evidenced by his beating a prisoner nearly to death. The show is playing tonight as Jobsite’s latest Job-side project. This is the second of two preview performances before its full incarnation in September at HCC Ybor. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: access arts, administrative work, American Stage, American Stage Company, Ami Sallee Corley, artistic side, arts scholarship, Christopher Rutherford, Curtis Belz, DeMario Henry, freelance artist, Gorilla Theatre, gumption, HCC Ybor, Jails hospitals and Hip-hop, Jobsite Theater, Keith Arsenault, preview performances, project opportunities, scholarship program
Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Backstage Tampa Bay |



Did you grow up with Amy Vanderbilt? Actor/director Ami Sallee Corley needs your help

Posted by amisalleecorley on Feb. 18, 2009, at 7:55 pm

Marion Baldeon and Casey Hicks in The Agreeable Husband

Marion Baldeon and Casey Hicks in The Agreeable Husband (Photo: Alex Catalano)

One of my goals when I took the leap last February and became a freelance artist was not only to have more time to commit to Jobsite, but also to collaborate with the artists I’ve met in the Tampa Bay area on original projects.  This not only ensures more work for artists in our community, but it raises a consciousness for Tampa-grown art.  The first to come to a fully realized production is The Agreeable Husband, a dance-theater piece based on Amy Vanderbilt’s “Complete Book of Etiquette”, a how-to book for husbands and wives published in 1952.  We need the community to help us with the next layer of the project, set to open this April.

I am conducting interviews with mothers, fathers and children who grew up with this book and its ideals.  If you or someone you know fits this description, we’d love to have your perspective in this project.  Please e-mail AgreeableHusband@gmail.com.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: Ami Sallee Corley, Betsy Goode, Christopher Rutherford, DeMario Henry, Gorilla Theatre, Ground Up Films, HCC Dance, Jobsite, Jobsite Theater, Nancy Cole, Shana Perkins, TBPAC, The Agreeable Husband, The Front Porch, Ybor Festival of the Moving Image
Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Backstage Tampa Bay |

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